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Inflection points in practice: Lessons from youth development experiences in Kenya

Earlier this program year, a team from the University of Minnesota Extension Department of Youth Development traveled to Kenya to build international partnerships and share approaches to Positive Youth Development (PYD). 

Extension team visiting with a Kenyan banana production manager in Kisii (from left to right): John Vreyens, Jennifer Skuza, Kaiya Novacek and Katie Becker.

The trip was led by me, Dr. Jennifer Skuza, in collaboration with Extension Educators Kaiya Novacek and Katie Becker, with support from Dr. John Vreyens, the now-retired Extension global initiatives director. Jessica Russo, Extension educator, did not travel but supported the curriculum development. 

Together, the team focused on teaching, partnership-building and learning alongside colleagues working with young people in Kisii County and other parts of Kenya.

In collaboration with Kisii University, the team delivered a two-day workshop for faculty and graduate students from the School of Arts and Social Sciences and the School of Education. 

Forty participants engaged in seven hours of interactive professional development focused on positive youth developmentcommunity asset mapping and social–emotional wellbeing. The team also visited five community-based youth serving organizations in Kisii County and met with directors of Kenya 4-H to discuss future collaboration. 

Throughout the impactful workshop and community organization visits, three key inflection points reshaped our understanding of youth development across contexts.

1. Rethinking “youth” across contexts

A Kisii University graduate student participates in a teach-back.

In the U.S., “youth” often refers to children and adolescents. In Kenya, however, youth is defined as young people ages 18–35. This distinction immediately framed our approach, requiring us to address higher education, workforce pathways, entrepreneurship and leadership development within a youth-focused framework.

Despite these differences, Positive Youth Development (PYD) principles translated seamlessly. Strengths-based engagement, belonging, skill-building and leadership development resonated across contexts, highlighting the global relevance and adaptability of PYD when grounded in local realities.

2. Collaborative learning in action

A second inflection point occurred when a Kisii University professor invited graduate students to join faculty in small group discussions during the workshop — and then serve as spokespersons for their groups during the teach-backs and gallery walks.

Extension team with workshop participants at Kisii University.

In a setting that often follows traditional academic hierarchies, this practice was an exciting example of collaborative innovation. 

Faculty and students became co-creators of learning, embodying the very PYD principles we were teaching: youth as contributors, partners and leaders.

In the workshop, we used asset mapping, culturally relevant case studies, participant-led teach-backs, where participants summarize and present their learning to the larger group, and gallery walks, in which groups prepare findings on written displays and rotate around the room to share with peers. 

These interactive methods allowed attendees to apply concepts to real-world scenarios, effectively linking theory to practice. Participants explored scenarios including student-faculty partnerships, student-led research projects, teacher preparation and the implementation of Kenya’s Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC). 

Kisii University faculty and students completing youth asset mapping. 

These methods fostered experiential, participatory learning and reflected best practices in adult education and positive youth development research.

3. Seeing PYD in action without naming it

Perhaps the most inspiring realization came through engagement with the five community-based organizations in Kisii County. 

Many organizations were already implementing practices aligned with PYD and creating pathways.

These organizations addressed critical community issues, including domestic violence safeguards, climate justice and workforce development, yet were not explicitly framed using PYD terminology. 

The sophistication and intentionality of these youth-informed, community-driven efforts illustrated that effective youth development often exists in practice before it is formalized in theory. 

Witnessing these strategies in action was both humbling and inspiring.

The value of mutual learning

What made this experience truly powerful was its foundation in mutual learning and youth partnership. 

Extension’s approach to PYD centers on working alongside young people as co-creators and leaders, recognizing their ideas, experiences and agency as essential to meaningful change. 

Extension team meeting with Kenya 4-H directors (from left to right): John Vreyens, Neema Grace, Kaiya Novacek, Sheila Mulil, Jennifer Skuza, Agatah Munyiiri and Katie-Becker.

We saw this spirit in action at Kisii University, where faculty and graduate students collaborated to strengthen higher education, and within the five community-based organizations we visited, where youth actively shaped programs and decision-making. 

Meetings with the directors of Kenya 4-H highlighted the inspiring role this national organization plays in supporting children’s education and equipping them with skills that extend beyond the classroom.

Throughout the trip, participants on all sides were genuinely invested in learning from one another. This exchange underscored how transformative mutual learning can be when rooted in cultural context, revealing the strengths, creativity and resilience embedded in local communities and the unique ways they support young people’s success.

It was also wonderful to build on previous efforts by Extension Department of Youth Development colleagues who conducted workshops with Kenyan educators from schools for the deaf and helped establish debate clubs. 

Implications for scholarly practitioners

These inflection points underscore several lessons for those working at the intersection of research and practice.

Language matters, but principles travel

PYD can adapt across contexts while respecting local definitions of youth.

Pedagogy models practice

Participatory teaching methods like case studies, teach-backs, gallery walks and asset mapping both instruct and exemplify PYD principles.

Communities innovate

Local organizations often embody youth development practices in sophisticated ways without formal frameworks, demonstrating that practice can precede theory.

Author: Jennifer A. Skuza, Ph.D., youth development department head and associate dean

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© 2026 Regents of the University of Minnesota. All rights reserved. The University of Minnesota is an equal opportunity educator and employer. This work is supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture.